Here is the description of the
World Confederation of the Past Pupils of Mary Help of Christians which
appears in the Directory of International Associations of the Faithful,
published by the Pontifical Council for the Laity.

* * *

Official name: World Confederation of the Past Pupils of Mary Help of
Christians

Also known as: Past Pupils of the FMA (Figlie di Maria Ausiliatrice)

Established: 1908

History: Early in the 20th century, a group of former Oratorian pupils
from Turin, under the guidance of Father Filippo Rinaldi and Sister
Caterina Arrighi, organized themselves into an association in order to
share and disseminate in their own environments the values received from
their education in the schools of the Daughters of Mary Help of
Christians (FMA).

It was Father Rinaldi himself who gave the inspiration for establishing
an international confederation which would be able to hand on from
generation to generation the educational legacy of Don Bosco and Mother
Maria Domenica Mazzarello, who was canonized in 1951.

Those women showed incredible enterprise in inventing forms of tangible
solidarity and education to get through to young people, children,
mothers, women workers, teachers and rural people.

They set up evening schools for housewives and for Italian migrant
women, free vocational schools for the working classes, mutual
aid/friendly societies, and a savings bank, a secretariat for providing
information, traveling libraries, and drama groups.

In 1911, the first general conference was convened in Turin after which
the association began to grow in numbers and in quality.

In 1921 the first issue of Unione was published, as the information
bulletin which to this day establishes a link between the former pupils,
men and women, of the Salesians.

In 1988, for the centenary of the death of Don Bosco, the rector major
of the Salesians gave official recognition to the World Confederation of
the Past Pupils of Mary Help of Christians as a group within the
Salesian Family.

Identity: The confederation is for men and women who received their
education in the schools of the FMA, regardless of their religious,
cultural, social and ethnic backgrounds.

Its purpose is the sharing, deeper understanding of and witness to the
human and religious values into which the former FMA pupils were
educated according to the "preventive system," which sums up the whole
educational experience of Don Bosco.

It also fosters the comprehensive Christian preparation of Catholic
ex-pupils in the light of the Gospel, by using both the spiritual aids
available to all the baptized, and those specific to Salesian education,
encouraging them to be committed and to bear witness to the faith and to
participate in the Church's mission.

The association also endeavors to ensure that non-Christian ex-pupils
can draw on elements of their Salesian education to become more
appreciative of the human and religious values of their own cultures.

The FMA past pupils undertake to nurture solid ties among themselves in
the ideal of using their own lives to offer others the authentic values
which make men and women worthy of that name; to cooperate with civic
institutions and voluntary associations by mobilizing actions of
solidarity to meet the emerging needs in the world; to foster a new self
awareness among women and a culture which sees being a woman as a
resource and not a problem; to launch, encourage and support initiatives
to assist young people in difficulties; and to use the mass media as
instruments for communicating values.

Organization: The basic group is the union; all the unions make up the
federation; all the federations make up the World Confederation.

At every level, the governance bodies are the Assembly, a Council, and
an Executive Board made up of lay people.

At the central level is the Collegio dei Probiviri and a board of
auditors. The FMA Institute, through the Consulta, has the task of
providing Christian instruction and spiritual direction. The Consulta
may attend all the meetings of the council and the board and intervene
in every stage of the life of the association.

Membership: The confederation has a membership of more than 40,000 in
Italy alone, and millions worldwide, including non-Christians, and is
present in 49 countries, in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, North
America and South America.

Works: The confederation does not directly manage any works of its own.
But the FMA past pupils are engaged in charitable, human development,
literacy, catechetical work and running youth centers by cooperating in
the Salesian lay style in implementing the apostolic project of the FMA
Institute.

Publications: Unione, a monthly magazine in Italian, Spanish and
Portuguese